Romanian Landscape Architects Association Ioana Tudora Pecha Kucha Presentation IFLA Europe General Assembly, 2-4 June 2017 Bucharest, Romania
The GREAT WALL of Romania
Demolition of Bucharest - the birth of a limited landscape Plan - Dana Harhoiu / Photos - Scanteia archive
And we get it BIG Photos Scanteia Archive Conform to Wikipedia the building has a developed area of 365,000 m 2, making it the world's second-largest (oops!) administrative building, after the Pentagon. With a height of 84 m, an area of 365,000 m 2 and having a volume of 2,550,000 m 3, it is also the fourth biggest building in the world, after the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center, the Temple of the Feathered Serpent in Teotihuacan, and the Pentagon. For comparison, the building exceeds by 2% the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza. BUT, the Palace of the Parliament is the heaviest building in the world, weighing in at around 4,098,500,000 kg. Palace of the Parliament was valued at 3 billion USD, making it the most expensive administrative building in the world. The cost of heating and electric lighting alone exceeds $6 million/year, as much as a medium-sized city.
https://www.facebook.com/bucurestioptimist/ Really BIG
Scanteia archive image The House of People in the final 1980es A BIG House with a GREAT Wall
Photos: Alexandru Mexi They stay in the house We move along our (wonder)wall
Alexandru Mexi / www.vice.ro
Behind the wall Hidden by the 3 km of fence there are 409.000 m2 of central green space that are staying quite and private, ignored and abandoned Photos: Alexandru Mexi
https://www.facebook.com/bucurestioptimist/ www.hotnews.ro epoch times romania www.totb.ro-bogdan iancu www.totb.ro-maria Adriana Popa www.activenews-mihai barbu www.adevarul.ro In front of the wall most of the time ignored, protests are going on. Behind the wall is total silence. The House of People became the Parliament Palace and the TABU stays as it was before
Breaking the WALL - Gândul campaign featuring Valeriu Zgonea and Roger Waters
2013 - The contest
2015 Deceneu și Dacii or the nationalist delirium
Meanwhile last night in Bucharest still waiting for our saviors and thinking about great design and landscape Marius Weber facebook.com/lastnightinbucharest
Or maybe stick with our traditional solution another fence!
The GREAT Wall of Romania We have always lived in a world obsessed by walls, defense and frontiers. The Chinese people overtake everybody with their great wall. But we always kept up with the Joneses. We always struggled to possess or achieve the greatest something: from the largest sausage to the most massive administrative building in the world. And we succeeded. We ve got a ridiculously huge house fenced by 3 kilometers of even more pointless wall, the GREAT WALL (obviously also huge). And all of this because, due to its utmost fragility, the House of People needs to be protected from the hugely violent population of uncivilized vandals. Everything is huge: the house, the wall, the social violence, Facebook. No attempt, not even Roger Waters or Superman, succeeded to convince the present users (the Romanian Parliament) to tear down the walled fence (Soros didn t even try). Both urban planning and landscape architecture contests failed to reassure our representatives that their security will not suffer if there won t be any fence to protect them. And the social reality proved them right! Attacked by shepherds and their sheep, by syndicates, by taxi drivers or Anonymous people who ask such weird things as justice, our supreme elected elite faces an equally huge dilemma. They somehow fancy the idea of a garden, especially if it has some nice nationalist discourse But a FOREST!?! Better not! Rather some more parking places. Or a nice (huge) monument! So, the 409.000 m 2 of central green space stay private, well... maybe it will be shared with our beloved orthodox cathedral, as spirituality goes with some relaxing moments. They have their House (and the cathedral), we have our Wonderwall through which we, simple mundane people, can admire the transcendent reality of the Olympian political power. And we wonder! And we wander along the great wall. Hoping for an unlimited landscape! What is important to underline is the continuity and discontinuity in the vernacular construction of the common and public space, a process that involve the individual dwellers in very different manners. The punctual tiny interventions need a new development in order to regain the coherence of the pre-1990 period. Such a proposal was analysed during the LE:NOTRE workshop held in 2015 in Bucharest.